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Friday, November 27, 2015

The Girl on the Train and Pork Lentil Soup

Last weekend, before things got absolutely crazy around here, I finished The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins. I have never read this author before and even though this book made the best seller list, I had not heard of it until my friend,Tami, recommended it.

I am very glad she recommended it and even happier I listened. This is a novel about 3 women and how their lives intertwine and are affected by relationships in their lives. It is told in first person by each of the 3 women. It is often compared to Gone Girl, a book that I loved even though I disliked every character in it. I can see how it is similar inasmuch as it is written from several points of view and the characters are not very likable but I thought they were still more likable than Gone Girl. It is the story of manipulation and low self esteem and how women, so often, think they need a man or a relationship to define them.

A couple of days ago, I shared with you a new recipe that I made for Hungarian Pancakes. The stew called for cubed pork so I had pulled some chops from the freezer, trimmed them and cut them from the bone. I then put the trimmings, bones, and vegetable trimmings from the stew into a stock pot. Added some seasonings and made pork stock. I strained the broth, cut the meat from the bones and started thinking about what I wanted to make with it. I had some red lentil in the cupboard left from when I had made Misr Wat from the Marcus Sammuelson autobiography, Yes Chef, and decided to make a Pork and Lentil soup.

Pork and Lentil Soup

adapted from Epicurious

1/2 large sweet onion, chopped

1 T. olive oil

4 cloves garlic, minced

1/2 t. cumin

1 bay leaf

1 t. dried thyme

1 c. red lentils

8 c. pork stock

3/4 c. pork in bite size pieces

salt and pepper to taste

Cook onion in oil with salt and pepper in a large soup pot over medium heat, stirring occasionally until softened, about 10 minutes. Add garlic, cumin, bay leaf, thyme and cook 1 minute more. Add lentils and broth, bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer partially covered until lentils are very soft and falling apart, 30-45 minutes. Discard the bay leaf and partially puree the soup using an immersion blender. Add the meat and allow to heat through before serving. Print Recipe

I had to go back and see what the book was about before I could even remember if I had read it. I didn't find it to be the fantastic book that so many were talking about but it was a book I did enjoy reading. Your soup sounds really good!

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